Basics of Hypothesis Testing: October 19
Basics of Hypothesis Testing: October 19
October 19
In Chapter 9:
Parameters Statistics
Vary No Yes
Calculated No Yes
Sampling Distributions of a Mean
(Introduced in Ch 8)
The sampling distributions of a mean (SDM)
describes the behavior of a sampling mean
x ~ N , SE x
where SE x
n
Hypothesis Testing
• Is also called significance testing
• Tests a claim about a parameter using
evidence (data in a sample
• The technique is introduced by
considering a one-sample z test
• The procedure is broken into four steps
• Each element of the procedure must be
understood
Hypothesis Testing Steps
A. Null and alternative hypotheses
B. Test statistic
C. P-value and interpretation
D. Significance level (optional)
§9.1 Null and Alternative
Hypotheses
• Convert the research question to null and
alternative hypotheses
• The null hypothesis (H0) is a claim of “no
difference in the population”
• The alternative hypothesis (Ha) claims
“H0 is false”
• Collect data and seek evidence against H0
as a way of bolstering Ha (deduction)
Illustrative Example: “Body Weight”
• The problem: In the 1970s, 20–29 year
old men in the U.S. had a mean μ body
weight of 170 pounds. Standard deviation
σ was 40 pounds. We test whether mean
body weight in the population now differs.
• Null hypothesis H0: μ = 170 (“no
difference”)
• The alternative hypothesis can be either
Ha: μ > 170 (one-sided test) or
Ha: μ ≠ 170 (two-sided test)
§9.2 Test Statistic
This is an example of a one-sample test of a
mean when σ is known. Use this statistic to
test the problem:
x 0
z stat
SEx
where 0 population mean assuming H 0 is true
and SEx
n
Illustrative Example: z statistic
• For the illustrative example, μ0 = 170
• We know σ = 40
• Take an SRS of n = 64. Therefore
40
SEx 5
n 64
• If we found a sample mean of 173, then
x 0 173 170
zstat 0.60
SEx 5
Illustrative Example: z statistic
If we found a sample mean of 185, then
x 0 185 170
zstat 3.00
SEx 5
Reasoning Behinµzstat
x ~ N 170 ,5
Sampling distribution of xbar
under H0: µ = 170 for n = 64
§9.3 P-value
• The P-value answer the question: What is the
probability of the observed test statistic or one
more extreme when H0 is true?
• This corresponds to the AUC in the tail of the
Standard Normal distribution beyond the zstat.
• Convert z statistics to P-value :
For Ha: μ > μ0 P = Pr(Z > zstat) = right-tail beyond zstat
For Ha: μ < μ0 P = Pr(Z < zstat) = left tail beyond zstat
For Ha: μ μ0 P = 2 × one-tailed P-value
• Use Table B or software to find these
probabilities (next two slides).
One-sided P-value for zstat of 0.6
One-sided P-value for zstat of 3.0
Two-Sided P-Value
• One-sided Ha
AUC in tail
beyond zstat
• Two-sided Ha
consider potential Examples: If one-sided P
deviations in both = 0.0010, then two-sided
directions P = 2 × 0.0010 = 0.0020.
double the one- If one-sided P = 0.2743,
sided P-value then two-sided P = 2 ×
0.2743 = 0.5486.
Interpretation
• P-value answer the question: What is the
probability of the observed test statistic …
when H0 is true?
• Thus, smaller and smaller P-values
provide stronger and stronger evidence
against H0
• Small P-value strong evidence
Interpretation
Conventions*
P > 0.10 non-significant evidence against H0
0.05 < P 0.10 marginally significant evidence
0.01 < P 0.05 significant evidence against H0
P 0.01 highly significant evidence against H0
Examples
P =.27 non-significant evidence against H0
P =.01 highly significant evidence against H0
* It is unwise to draw firm borders for “significance”
α-Level (Used in some situations)
Truth
Decision H0 true H0 false
Retain H0 Correct retention Type II error
Reject H0 Type I error Correct rejection
| | n
1 z1 0 a
2
| 170 190 | 16
1.96
40
0.04
0.5160
Reasoning Behind Power
• Competing sampling distributions
Top curve (next page) assumes H0 is true
Bottom curve assumes Ha is true
α is set to 0.05 (two-sided)
• We will reject H0 when a sample mean exceeds
189.6 (right tail, top curve)
• The probability of getting a value greater than
189.6 on the bottom curve is 0.5160,
corresponding to the power of the test
Sample Size Requirements
Sample size for one-sample z test:
n
2
z1 z1
2
2
2
where
1 – β ≡ desired power
α ≡ desired significance level (two-sided)
σ ≡ population standard deviation
Δ = μ0 – μa ≡ the difference worth detecting
Example: Sample Size
Requirement
How large a sample is needed for a one-sample z
test with 90% power and α = 0.05 (two-tailed)
when σ = 40? Let H0: μ = 170 and Ha: μ = 190
(thus, Δ = μ0 − μa = 170 – 190 = −20)
n
2
z1 z1
2
2
40 (1.28 1.96 )
2 2
41 .99
2
20 2